Cable Calc: Formula

[ F_harmonic = \frac1\sqrt1 + \sum_h=3,5,7... \left(\fracI_hI_1\right)^2 \cdot h^0.5 ] | Standard | Approach | Key Features | |----------|----------|---------------| | NEC (USA) | Table-based | Ampacity tables, 60/75/90°C columns, adjustment factors | | IEC 60287 | Calculation | Explicit thermal resistance model (Rth), for complex installations | | BS 7671 | Mixed | Simplified tables + voltage drop formula | | IEEE 835 | Calculation | For large power cables, includes soil drying effects |

[ \boxedS = \max\left( S_ampacity, S_V_d, S_short-circuit \right) ] cable calc formula

Introduction At first glance, selecting an electrical cable seems trivial: pick a wire that fits the current. In reality, cable sizing is a multivariable optimization problem governed by a single master equation derived from thermodynamics and electromagnetism. The "cable calc formula" is not one formula but a synthesis of voltage drop limits, thermal constraints, and short-circuit withstand capability. [ F_harmonic = \frac1\sqrt1 + \sum_h=3,5,7

For AC circuits:

…but that’s only the beginning. The steady-state ampacity of a cable is derived from the heat balance equation: The "cable calc formula" is not one formula

[ I = \sqrt\frac\theta_max - \theta_ambR_dc \cdot \left(1 + \alpha(\theta_max - 20)\right) \cdot \left( R_th \right) ]

[ R_ac = R_dc \left(1 + y_s + y_p\right) ] Where (y_s) (skin) and (y_p) (proximity) depend on frequency and conductor spacing. For longer faults (>0.5s), the heat conducts into insulation. Use IEC 60949’s iterative method, which adds a factor (\epsilon):